Always a give & take with LPs. The more grip you get, the easier it is to attack and play aggressive with a weird style close to the table. But then you lose some reversal.
Still, I like the concept of being a pinch more in control of the amount of spin based on my strokes, if I have LP with a little grip on it, vs a high reversal just reflect back LP.
With high reversal LPs, I feel your more confined to the rules of LP play. ie - Chop block vs topspin (returning backspin), and aggressive punch vs backspin (returning topspin). IMO it became predictable. And that's never good. At least for me it wasn't. What if I wanted to push a backspin serve returning some sort of dead-ish ball? This way when the opponent serves pure backspin, they don't know exactly what style of shot/spin I'll give back necessarily. Easier to do that and vary the spin with a slightly grippier LP.
I once hit with Dawei 388D-1 in 1.5 sponge (can't find that anymore) and I was convinced that was the best hitting LP I've ever experienced. Recently ordered that rubber in 1.0 from some seller on Ali Express and the uncut sheet didn't even fully cover my penhold blade. SMH. So never again with that seller and/or rubber. IDK. Moot point now anyways as I'm not currently playing LPs.